>Everything Old Will Be New Again – The "Militia Threat" Returns

Posted onOctober 3, 2007|Comments Off on >Everything Old Will Be New Again – The "Militia Threat" Returns

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With a lucky 13 months to go before the 2008 elections (a probable Dem sweep with Hillary as POTUS and increased Senate/House Dem majorities), I just came across this blast from the Clinton I past.

My fave? The rankings of militia “types” by belief system and purported threat level:

***As part of their report, Agents Duffy and Brantley developed a profile of a typical militia group member.

– White males ranging in age from early 20s to mid-50s. – Attracted to the movement because of gun control issues, believing that the government wants to disarm the people and abolish the second amendment. – Generally maintain strong Christian beliefs. – Ardent defenders of the Constitution. – Feel they represent the ideological legacy of the Founding Fathers.

Agents Duffy and Brantley conclude that the modern militias’ tendency to challenge laws and the authority of elected officials create a very real threat to public safety. Yet, they also report that many militia groups condemned the Oklahoma City bombing and do not condone the use of violence in pursuit of their goals.

The Militia Threat Assessment Typology

In dealing with antigovernment militia groups, the FBI recommends law enforcement agencies first determine the threat level, if any posed by the group. To assist them, Agent Alan S. Brantley and former Agent Gregory Cooper of the FBI’s Critical Incident and Response Group in Quantico created this “Militia Threat Assessment Typology.”

– Demonstrate many of the same traits and characteristics as category III groups but are likely to be smaller, more isolated cells or fringe groups whose members have grown frustrated with their peers’ unwillingness to pursue a more aggressive strategy. – Often maintain an openly offensive, rather than defensive posture. – May grow out of other less threatening militia groups or may evolve independently from any other group associations. – Often attract individuals with frank mental disorders. These individuals may either act alone or with a small number of associates who share similar paranoid/disordered beliefs. – Plot and engage in serious criminal activity, e.g., homicides, bombings, and other acts of a terrorist nature.

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Sure glad that Agents Brantley and Duffy’s original paper on the topic isn’t just sitting in an archive waiting to be part of the Clinton II playbook.

Of course, even if it were, that’s not going to happen, because the gun control issue is politically dead, right?